超越闪光灯和警笛:社区辅助医疗是老年人的健康安全网。

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Alexander J. Ulintz MD, Carmen E. Quatman MD, PhD
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A large gap exists between the times and places where older adults need care and the resources available to address those needs.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Despite efforts to increase older adults' access to in-home care through home-based primary care, telemedicine, and workforce development, persistent gaps prompted recent calls by the American Geriatrics Society and the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry to expand the “team based geriatric physician and health professional workforce by nontraditional means.”<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> This creates an opportunity for innovative, multidisciplinary, patient-centered teams to bridge the gap.</p><p>Emergency medical services (EMS) agencies and clinicians are often called upon to fill this gap: they are accessible, mobile, and a trusted source of care in communities across the nation.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Though originally designed for emergency treatment and transportation of the critically ill and injured, EMS clinicians are increasingly embracing roles that span community outreach, prevention, and chronic disease management in a model of care known as “community paramedicine.”<span><sup>5</sup></span> Community paramedicine is designed to fill the space between fixed medical system resources and dynamic community needs by leveraging availability, accessibility, and versatile skills of EMS clinicians working as part of physician-led or multidisciplinary team. This model of care is of clear importance to older adults who are aging in place.</p><p><i>JAGS</i> has been at the forefront of rigorous examination of the community paramedicine model of care for older adults. As early as 1968, Mel Spear advocated for the concept of a physician-led, team-based, patient-centered approach to physical, emotional, and social well-being of older adults in “Paramedical Services for Older Adults.”<span><sup>6</sup></span> More recently, <i>JAGS</i> authors have described an array of community paramedicine programs tailored to the needs of older adults, including providing urgent, in-home, integrated evaluation and treatment to avoid unnecessary EMS transportation of medically complex older adults,<span><sup>7, 8</sup></span> facilitating the ED-to-home care transition,<span><sup>9</sup></span> using 9-1-1 calls as a sentinel event to prompt fall prevention intervention,<span><sup>10, 11</sup></span> and integrating community paramedics into home-based primary care practices to extend telehealth geriatrician reach and efficiency.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Additional program examples support the feasibility, effectiveness, and short-term health outcomes of community paramedicine for older adults.<span><sup>13-15</sup></span> However, limited data describe patient safety, process and health outcomes, and sustainable financial models for community paramedicine (Figure 1).</p><p>In this issue of <i>JAGS</i>, Parsons et al. examine a common clinical dilemma affecting the care of older adults: how does a clinician balance the need to evaluate a community-dwelling older adult with dementia and an unscheduled acute care need, with the risk of iatrogenic harm associated with exposure to and transitioning to-and-from an acute care facility for evaluation? The authors leveraged a community paramedicine service available to their home-based primary care teams to provide older adults the benefit of timely access to care without defaulting to the risks of the traditional unscheduled acute care paradigm. Beyond achieving their primary aim of demonstrating the safety of community paramedicine intervention for older adults with dementia, the authors noted three pertinent findings applicable to the broader field of geriatrics.</p><p>The authors noted increased economic and racial diversity among their community paramedicine program participants with dementia. This is infrequently reported on in the community paramedicine literature but sheds an important light on community paramedicine programs as a community health service capable of promoting health equity and trust.<span><sup>16</sup></span> Furthermore, among patients evaluated by the community paramedicine program, those with dementia were more likely to be referred to hospice. While not the primary outcome of this study, this finding highlights the potential of community paramedicine programs to alter clinical trajectories for patients who would historically end up in the revolving door of acute care use near the end of life. This unique finding adds to a growing literature base supporting the ability of community paramedicine programs to leverage an in-home acute care evaluation to prompt appropriate referrals and wrap-around services, as previously demonstrated for conditions such as falls and fragility fractures.<span><sup>10, 11</sup></span> Finally, this model of care leveraged multiple funding sources: value-based care as part of a health system accountable care organization, telemedicine visit reimbursement, and volume-based billing to build upon the predominantly single-source funding used in the other community paramedicine programs highlighted above. Though the study was limited in its use of a novel outcome (over vs under-transport) that will require additional validation and generalizability limited to home-based primary care practices, this study contributes to the growing literature base supporting community paramedicine for older adults.</p><p>With mounting evidence that integrated, in-home care for older adults through community paramedicine is safe, acceptable, and effective, what barriers limit expansion?</p><p>First, there remains a flashing lights and sirens conceptualization of EMS that emphasizes its traditional transportation role. While this is certainly a popular perception, it misses the fact that EMS clinicians are trained medical professionals embedded in communities across the nation with the ability to provide a wide spectrum of mobile and in-home care. Because of this, opportunities for collaboration between EMS agencies and nonemergency specialties often go unrecognized and underutilized in caring for older adults. In addition to limited awareness of community paramedicine partners, concerns regarding duplication of services also stifle growth. Early guidelines from the National Association of State EMS Officials recommend using a community health needs assessment to identify gaps in care that would best be addressed by community paramedics.<span><sup>17</sup></span></p><p>Second, EMS agencies are largely regulated at the local and state level. In some cases, flexible regulations promote locally tailored solutions that led to many of the innovative community paramedicine programs highlighted above. In other cases, rigid regulations may standardize the approach but reduce the ability to customize a program to adapt to community needs.<span><sup>18</sup></span> This variation in practice leads to challenges in both training and outcomes reporting. Heterogeneity in the services offered and variety of EMS clinicians performing these roles (e.g., emergency medical technician, advanced emergency medical technician, paramedic), the National EMS Advisory Council recommended ongoing consensus development regarding education requirements for an expanded role of EMS clinicians before establishing a national standard.<span><sup>19</sup></span> Similarly, variations in program design and outcomes reporting make it difficult to conduct the rigorous research necessary to inform policy development.</p><p>Third, collaboration between EMS agencies and nonemergency specialties requires the ability to see, share, and synchronize data. Many EMS agencies struggle to establish the complex, and often expensive, linkage and health records access from multiple sources. While some EMS agencies have circumvented the issue via health systems partnerships with accessible electronic health records, this barrier is notably high for smaller EMS agencies, clinician practices, and health systems alike.</p><p>Finally, payment for both community paramedicine programs and multidisciplinary care for older adults remains problematic. Despite promising international examples of cost reduction and improved health outcomes through community paramedicine, reimbursement for EMS-based services in the United States has largely depended upon transporting a patient rather than the value of the care provided and outcomes achieved.<span><sup>14, 20</sup></span> As such, many community paramedicine programs are grant-funded or subsidized by a health system, though more recent policies have explored fee-for-service and value-based payments. 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The authors leveraged a community paramedicine service available to their home-based primary care teams to provide older adults the benefit of timely access to care without defaulting to the risks of the traditional unscheduled acute care paradigm. Beyond achieving their primary aim of demonstrating the safety of community paramedicine intervention for older adults with dementia, the authors noted three pertinent findings applicable to the broader field of geriatrics.</p><p>The authors noted increased economic and racial diversity among their community paramedicine program participants with dementia. This is infrequently reported on in the community paramedicine literature but sheds an important light on community paramedicine programs as a community health service capable of promoting health equity and trust.<span><sup>16</sup></span> Furthermore, among patients evaluated by the community paramedicine program, those with dementia were more likely to be referred to hospice. While not the primary outcome of this study, this finding highlights the potential of community paramedicine programs to alter clinical trajectories for patients who would historically end up in the revolving door of acute care use near the end of life. This unique finding adds to a growing literature base supporting the ability of community paramedicine programs to leverage an in-home acute care evaluation to prompt appropriate referrals and wrap-around services, as previously demonstrated for conditions such as falls and fragility fractures.<span><sup>10, 11</sup></span> Finally, this model of care leveraged multiple funding sources: value-based care as part of a health system accountable care organization, telemedicine visit reimbursement, and volume-based billing to build upon the predominantly single-source funding used in the other community paramedicine programs highlighted above. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

为居家养老的老年人提供计划外、急诊和纵向护理是医疗系统面临的一项重要挑战,但在很大程度上尚未得到解决。老年人需要护理的时间和地点与满足这些需求的可用资源之间存在巨大差距。尽管通过居家初级保健、远程医疗和劳动力发展努力增加老年人获得居家护理的机会,但持续存在的差距促使美国老年医学会和美国老年精神病学协会最近呼吁 "通过非传统手段扩大以团队为基础的老年医学医生和保健专业人员队伍"。"2, 3 这为创新的、多学科的、以患者为中心的团队创造了机会,以弥补这一差距。紧急医疗服务(EMS)机构和临床医生经常被要求填补这一差距:他们方便、机动,是全国各社区值得信赖的医疗来源。5 社区辅助医疗旨在利用急救医疗服务临床医生的可用性、可及性和多方面技能,填补固定医疗系统资源与动态社区需求之间的空白,是医生领导的或多学科团队的一部分。这种护理模式对于居家养老的老年人显然具有重要意义。"JAGS "一直站在最前沿,对社区辅助医疗护理老年人的模式进行严格研究。早在 1968 年,梅尔-斯皮尔(Mel Spear)就在《老年人辅助医疗服务》一书中倡导以医生为主导、以团队为基础、以病人为中心的理念,为老年人提供身体、情感和社会福祉方面的服务。"6 最近,JAGS 的作者介绍了一系列针对老年人需求的社区辅助医疗项目,包括提供紧急、居家、综合评估和治疗,以避免对病情复杂的老年人进行不必要的急救运送,7, 8 促进急诊室到居家护理的过渡,9 将 9-1-1 电话作为哨点事件,以促使采取预防跌倒的干预措施,10, 11 以及将社区辅助医疗人员整合到居家初级保健实践中,以扩大老年远程医疗的覆盖范围并提高效率。其他项目实例也证明了社区辅助医疗对老年人的可行性、有效性和短期健康效果。在本期 JAGS 杂志上,Parsons 等人研究了影响老年人护理的一个常见临床难题:临床医生如何平衡评估患有痴呆症和计划外急症护理需求的社区居住老年人的需求与接触和往返急症护理机构进行评估相关的先天性伤害风险?作者利用社区辅助医疗服务为其居家初级医疗团队提供服务,让老年人及时获得医疗服务,同时避免了传统计划外急症护理模式的风险。除了实现证明社区辅助医疗干预对老年痴呆症患者的安全性这一主要目标外,作者还指出了三项适用于更广泛的老年医学领域的相关发现。16 此外,在接受社区辅助医疗项目评估的患者中,痴呆症患者更有可能被转诊至临终关怀机构。虽然这并不是本研究的主要结果,但这一发现凸显了社区辅助医疗项目在改变患者临床轨迹方面的潜力,而这些患者在临近生命终点时往往会陷入急症护理的漩涡。这一独特的发现为越来越多的文献基础增添了新的内容,这些文献支持社区辅助医疗项目能够利用居家急症护理评估来促进适当的转诊和周边服务,正如之前针对跌倒和脆性骨折等病症所证明的那样。10, 11 最后,这种护理模式利用了多种资金来源:作为医疗系统责任护理组织一部分的价值护理、远程医疗就诊报销以及基于数量的计费,从而在上述其他社区辅助医疗项目主要使用的单一资金来源的基础上更进一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Beyond flashing lights and sirens: Community paramedicine as health safety nets for older adults

Beyond flashing lights and sirens: Community paramedicine as health safety nets for older adults

Providing unscheduled, acute, and longitudinal care to older adults who are aging in place is a critical, yet largely unsolved, health system challenge. A large gap exists between the times and places where older adults need care and the resources available to address those needs.1 Despite efforts to increase older adults' access to in-home care through home-based primary care, telemedicine, and workforce development, persistent gaps prompted recent calls by the American Geriatrics Society and the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry to expand the “team based geriatric physician and health professional workforce by nontraditional means.”2, 3 This creates an opportunity for innovative, multidisciplinary, patient-centered teams to bridge the gap.

Emergency medical services (EMS) agencies and clinicians are often called upon to fill this gap: they are accessible, mobile, and a trusted source of care in communities across the nation.4 Though originally designed for emergency treatment and transportation of the critically ill and injured, EMS clinicians are increasingly embracing roles that span community outreach, prevention, and chronic disease management in a model of care known as “community paramedicine.”5 Community paramedicine is designed to fill the space between fixed medical system resources and dynamic community needs by leveraging availability, accessibility, and versatile skills of EMS clinicians working as part of physician-led or multidisciplinary team. This model of care is of clear importance to older adults who are aging in place.

JAGS has been at the forefront of rigorous examination of the community paramedicine model of care for older adults. As early as 1968, Mel Spear advocated for the concept of a physician-led, team-based, patient-centered approach to physical, emotional, and social well-being of older adults in “Paramedical Services for Older Adults.”6 More recently, JAGS authors have described an array of community paramedicine programs tailored to the needs of older adults, including providing urgent, in-home, integrated evaluation and treatment to avoid unnecessary EMS transportation of medically complex older adults,7, 8 facilitating the ED-to-home care transition,9 using 9-1-1 calls as a sentinel event to prompt fall prevention intervention,10, 11 and integrating community paramedics into home-based primary care practices to extend telehealth geriatrician reach and efficiency.12 Additional program examples support the feasibility, effectiveness, and short-term health outcomes of community paramedicine for older adults.13-15 However, limited data describe patient safety, process and health outcomes, and sustainable financial models for community paramedicine (Figure 1).

In this issue of JAGS, Parsons et al. examine a common clinical dilemma affecting the care of older adults: how does a clinician balance the need to evaluate a community-dwelling older adult with dementia and an unscheduled acute care need, with the risk of iatrogenic harm associated with exposure to and transitioning to-and-from an acute care facility for evaluation? The authors leveraged a community paramedicine service available to their home-based primary care teams to provide older adults the benefit of timely access to care without defaulting to the risks of the traditional unscheduled acute care paradigm. Beyond achieving their primary aim of demonstrating the safety of community paramedicine intervention for older adults with dementia, the authors noted three pertinent findings applicable to the broader field of geriatrics.

The authors noted increased economic and racial diversity among their community paramedicine program participants with dementia. This is infrequently reported on in the community paramedicine literature but sheds an important light on community paramedicine programs as a community health service capable of promoting health equity and trust.16 Furthermore, among patients evaluated by the community paramedicine program, those with dementia were more likely to be referred to hospice. While not the primary outcome of this study, this finding highlights the potential of community paramedicine programs to alter clinical trajectories for patients who would historically end up in the revolving door of acute care use near the end of life. This unique finding adds to a growing literature base supporting the ability of community paramedicine programs to leverage an in-home acute care evaluation to prompt appropriate referrals and wrap-around services, as previously demonstrated for conditions such as falls and fragility fractures.10, 11 Finally, this model of care leveraged multiple funding sources: value-based care as part of a health system accountable care organization, telemedicine visit reimbursement, and volume-based billing to build upon the predominantly single-source funding used in the other community paramedicine programs highlighted above. Though the study was limited in its use of a novel outcome (over vs under-transport) that will require additional validation and generalizability limited to home-based primary care practices, this study contributes to the growing literature base supporting community paramedicine for older adults.

With mounting evidence that integrated, in-home care for older adults through community paramedicine is safe, acceptable, and effective, what barriers limit expansion?

First, there remains a flashing lights and sirens conceptualization of EMS that emphasizes its traditional transportation role. While this is certainly a popular perception, it misses the fact that EMS clinicians are trained medical professionals embedded in communities across the nation with the ability to provide a wide spectrum of mobile and in-home care. Because of this, opportunities for collaboration between EMS agencies and nonemergency specialties often go unrecognized and underutilized in caring for older adults. In addition to limited awareness of community paramedicine partners, concerns regarding duplication of services also stifle growth. Early guidelines from the National Association of State EMS Officials recommend using a community health needs assessment to identify gaps in care that would best be addressed by community paramedics.17

Second, EMS agencies are largely regulated at the local and state level. In some cases, flexible regulations promote locally tailored solutions that led to many of the innovative community paramedicine programs highlighted above. In other cases, rigid regulations may standardize the approach but reduce the ability to customize a program to adapt to community needs.18 This variation in practice leads to challenges in both training and outcomes reporting. Heterogeneity in the services offered and variety of EMS clinicians performing these roles (e.g., emergency medical technician, advanced emergency medical technician, paramedic), the National EMS Advisory Council recommended ongoing consensus development regarding education requirements for an expanded role of EMS clinicians before establishing a national standard.19 Similarly, variations in program design and outcomes reporting make it difficult to conduct the rigorous research necessary to inform policy development.

Third, collaboration between EMS agencies and nonemergency specialties requires the ability to see, share, and synchronize data. Many EMS agencies struggle to establish the complex, and often expensive, linkage and health records access from multiple sources. While some EMS agencies have circumvented the issue via health systems partnerships with accessible electronic health records, this barrier is notably high for smaller EMS agencies, clinician practices, and health systems alike.

Finally, payment for both community paramedicine programs and multidisciplinary care for older adults remains problematic. Despite promising international examples of cost reduction and improved health outcomes through community paramedicine, reimbursement for EMS-based services in the United States has largely depended upon transporting a patient rather than the value of the care provided and outcomes achieved.14, 20 As such, many community paramedicine programs are grant-funded or subsidized by a health system, though more recent policies have explored fee-for-service and value-based payments. However, the lack of reimbursement for both the care provided and outcomes achieved remains threatening to the field as a whole.15 We echo the sentiments of Colenda and Applegate and believe that their proposed solution of increasing investment in geriatric clinical service lines should include funding community paramedicine programs for older adults.2

Leveraging integrated primary care and community paramedicine partnerships, as outlined in Parsons et al., demonstrates that team-based, mobile, patient-centered approaches can fill critical gaps in care, promote health equity, and alter the trajectory of older adults' care to promote aging in place. We encourage you to read Parsons et al.'s paper in this issue of JAGS, consider EMS agencies and clinicians beyond the lights and sirens, and re-envision EMS as a critical partner in transforming care delivery for older adults.

Concept, design, and writing: Alexander J. Ulintz and Carmen E. Quatman.

The authors declare no conflicts of interest relevant to this study.

The sponsors had no role in any aspect of the research or preparation or approval of the manuscript.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
6.30%
发文量
504
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) is the go-to journal for clinical aging research. We provide a diverse, interprofessional community of healthcare professionals with the latest insights on geriatrics education, clinical practice, and public policy—all supporting the high-quality, person-centered care essential to our well-being as we age. Since the publication of our first edition in 1953, JAGS has remained one of the oldest and most impactful journals dedicated exclusively to gerontology and geriatrics.
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